The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Netherland­s turn back the clock

Ronald Koeman’s team shows glimpses of Total Football during drubbing of Romania in Rd of 16

- LORI EWING

IT WAS gorgeously simple football — the hardest thing there is, to reproduce Johan Cruyff. From the Dutch side of the centre circle, Jerdy Schouten rolled a pass to Xavi Simons. A pass with neither power nor pace, but it immaculate­ly split two Romanian shirts, the referee and found Xavi Simons in the space.

The playmaker cushioned the ball on his left instep, spun to his right, took a couple touches, and released Cody Gakpo, ferreting on the left flank. He cut away, then cut in, leaving his marker in the wake, took a touch to gather himself and slammed the ball netwards, a low and ferocious shot inside goalkeeper Florin Nita’s near post.

It was a throwback goal from a throwback display, bursting with a blend of flair and finesse (except in front of the goal), pace and precision, transporti­ng for a moment or two to the heady 90s of Dutch football, with those highly-skilled artistes of self-destructio­n. At first, the goal was a three-man orchestra. But the replays would insist that more men were involved. While the men on the left made the goal happen, the ones on the right helped make the goal happen with delightful movement off the ball and scattering the defenders’ attention.

The moment Schouten passed the ball to Simons, right-back Denzel Dumfries hared down his flank, forcing Romanian left-back Vasile Mogos to attend him. This, in turn furnished left winger Steven Bergwijn the space to veer towards the centre of the box, like a No.10. There was already the heavily marked Memphis Depay sniffing near the goalkeeper. The Dutch seemed to possess numerical advantage, though it was an illusion caused by their positional superiorit­y.

Freeze frame the moment Gakpo was to pull the trigger, you could see Bergwijn in a chasm of space. The goal, thus, was more total football than it first came across, involving Cruyffian principles of positional rotation, creating an extra man and winning oneon-ones. Not every move though was from the manual of Total Football, but there were shades that would have delighted its inventors.

At least, this was a lively, at times breathtaki­ng, per- formance unlike the group games. So much so that a scribe told manager Ronald Koeman that Cruyff would have cried had he watched them surrender to Austria. He gave a pragmatic answer.

“I know he liked attacking football very much, but I was a part of his team for a long time and we had worse matches than we did against Austria. Of course, we are a proud nation; we like to win, we like to play nice football, but it’s not always (going to) happen.”

This was not an outpour a lone defeat brought, but a reaction to the dreary football of Dutch for the best part of a decade. Before the Euros, a newspaper ran the headline “Total Non-football”. He was accused of favouritis­m and “lack of ideas.”

Attacking football, though, finally happened. Just at the right time, when the business-end is winking.

Rediscover­ing the verve

From the start, they rediscover­ed the verve. The movements were sharp, the transition­s smoother, passing pinpoint, communicat­ion improved and pressing more relentless. A few tweaks to the forward line helped.

For the first time in the tournament Bergwijn started on the right wing and the return of Dumfries enhanced their threat on this side. The right-sided combo wreaked havoc on the Romanian defence. Dumfries, all verve, presses high, makes quick overlappin­g runs.

Consequent­ly, Bergwijn slides in and effectivel­y becomes a No.10.

He has twinkling feet to wriggle out of tight spaces and maximise half spaces, which makes the perfect bill to unlock low blocks. All the goals came through the leftside, but the industry on the right-side contribute­d too.

But the masterstro­ke was slotting the forward Simons into a deeper role. Just 21, he is prone to stray lapses, but he’s the most inventive creator at Koeman’s disposal. A versatile forward, capable of playing on the wings as well as false 9 or No 10, he conducted the orchestra with the maturity of a seasoned maestro.

Vision and quick thinking

Both goals originated from his vision and quick thinking. His link-up play with Gakpo was reminiscen­t of Arjen Robben-wesley Sneijder tangos, albeit on the opposite wing. But for over-enthusiasm in front of the goal, he could have made his presence in the scoring sheet too. “I thought he was absolutely the best. Tremendous in his positionin­g, his drive, how aggressive­ly he wins the ball,” Koeman said.

If he is the pulse, Gakpo is the punch. A German newspaper called his goal Turbo-to, translated as turbo hit. The shot clocked 125 kph; a low-flung bullet.

His swift cutbacks, like the swipe of a sharp knife, leaves the defender clasping his boot in air. Amplifying his complexity to the full backs, he is a right-footed player operating on the left.

In his classical move, he picks up the ball on his right flank, feigns to go down towards the byline, then cuts inside and scores. Sometimes he would score at the near post and sometimes he would take a few more steps inside the penalty area, or just outside it, and score at the far post. Sometimes he would shoot low and sometimes he would shoot high. The left-flank Robben. “His starting position is on the left side because he is really dangerous if he comes one against one with the right full-back,” Koeman would say.

The manager would elaborate his qualities. “He can go inside, outside, he has his qualities, he’s strong. He’s playing at a great level this tournament, maybe the most important player until now. I hope that the rest can come to that level,” he said about the joint top-scorer of the tournament with three goals.

His accuracy has improved. Of his 11 shots, seven were on target, three resulted in goals too. He creates goals too, like when he tiptoed on the byline and threaded a pass in tight space for Donyell Malen to score. The latter coming off the bench showed his goalsscori­ng knack with a brace, the second the end product of a frenetic run, wherein he chopped inside two defenders to unleash his thunderbol­t.

That they managed 23 attempts in the game reflects their attacking mindset, though just seven shots were on target and three that found the net’s back exposes their sloppy finishing (seven off 64 in the whole tournament). If their forwards could tick that box, the Dutch could whirr into serious title contenders, and a chip off the old Total Football block.

TURKEY WRESTED the dark horses tag from Austria's grasp in a pulsating Euro 2024 last16 match on Tuesday, sparking celebratio­ns in Turkish communitie­s around the world, even as far away as Toronto.

Merih Demiral scored both goals in the 2-1 full-throttle victory that injected Turkish fans with hope of another long Euros run after their narrow 3-2 loss in the 2008 semifinals. However giants the Netherland­s, 3-0 winners over Romania in Tuesday's early last-16 game, stand in their way.

Demiral's two goals came from Arda Guler corners.

A hailstorm of bottles and cups rained down at the 19-year-old Real Madrid midfielder's feet when he set up to take the second corner and, after the goal, Guler turned to the Austria fans and icily pointed one finger to his ear.

On a night Turkey were missing captain Hakan Calhanoglu to suspension, Guler's fearlessne­ss was remarkable.

His sliding through ball set up the corner that led to Demiral's first goal before the game was a minute old. Clocked at 57 seconds, it was the fastest goal of a Euros knockout game.

Guler, one of Europe's brightest young

stars and the first Turkish player to win the Champions League trophy last season, quarter-backed Turkey all night and nearly scored with a brazen shot from 50 metres with Austria's keeper far out of his goal. “He worked for the team and ran like I've never seen him run in his career,” Turkey manager Vincenzo Montella said. “We still know he needs to mature physically, especially given his young age, so I compliment him.”

Unbelievab­le save

Turkey goalkeeper Mert Gunok put an exclamatio­n point on the full-throttle night with one of the tournament's top saves, stretching with lightning quick reflexes to palm away Christoph Baumgartne­r's header that looked destined for the net. Austria forward Michael Gregoritsc­h described it as one of the best saves he had ever seen.

“You have to give credit to the Turkish goalkeeper because I think it was extremely difficult to stop. Unbelievab­le, really,” Gregoritsc­h said.

Austria coach Ralf Rangnick was asked if the save reminded him of England keeper Gordon Banks' famous stop to deny Pele at the 1970 World Cup.

“True,” he replied, then added that had the ball gone in his squad would have gone on to win. “(But) with Gordon Banks in goal, that was the last chance that we had.”

The atmosphere inside Leipzig's stadium was electric on Tuesday. Turkey's matches have been like home games in Germany, where an estimated three million people with Turkish roots live. Tuesday's match was the only one in the round of 16 not shown on free TV in Germany, prompting outrage from Turkish fans. Turkey, a team that always arrives at major tournament­s with high hopes only to crash out with near misses, advanced out of the Euro group stage for the third time. They play the Netherland­s in the quarter-finals in Berlin on Saturday.

Turkey’s matches have been like home games in Germany, where an estimated three million people with Turkish roots live.

 ?? Reuters ?? Cody Gakpo celebrates after scoring the Netherland­s’ first goal against Romania.
Reuters Cody Gakpo celebrates after scoring the Netherland­s’ first goal against Romania.

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